87 S.W. 1054 | Tex. App. | 1905
The appellee as plaintiff below recovered judgment against appellant for certain school lands situated in Ochiltree County. The land in controversy were awarded to Lena Rupprecht February 5, 1902, on her application therefor dated December 30, 1901. On August 6, 1902, she conveyed to A. E. Sullivan, who in turn conveyed to appellant on January 6, 1903, the assignees respectively becoming substitute purchasers in the General Land Office. The appellee made application to purchase as an actual settler on January 3, 1902, and January 30, 1903. These applications were rejected.
Upon the trial, over the objections of appellant, the court permitted the appellee to introduce in evidence certain testimony elicited by cross-interrogatories propounded to the witness A. E. Sullivan, the effect of which constitutes an attack upon his purchase from Rupprecht and sale to appellant because of fraud and collusion. If this issue could in any event be inquired into (Logan v. Curry,
There was no error in refusing to instruct the jury that appellee Rutherford's second application to purchase was an abandonment or waiver of his rights under the first.
A most serious question is presented by the action of the court in refusing to give appellant's requested charge number 5, to wit: "We ask the court to instruct the jury that if they believe from the evidence that said Rupprecht at the time of filing her application was not an actual settler upon said land, but that she afterwards on the same day and before any intervening rights attached did become an actual settler thereon as required by law, and that she and those claiming under her have continued such actual settlement to this date, then to find for the defendant." But a majority of the court are inclined to believe that there was no error in refusing it. In most, if not all, of the cases examined by us wherein a claimant under a premature application has been protected, the award to him was actually made by the Commissioner of the General Land Office at a time when there was no impediment, and prior to the time of the accrual of the rights of the contestant. (Hazelwood v. Rogan,
For the error in admitting testimony tending to show fraud and collusion in Sullivan's purchase and sale, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded. *480